Definitely deleted them. Wondering how the worm/virus pulled my email address off the board.
I would be surprised if my address was in the address book of any of the people whom I received email from.
the virus randomly matches up both the TO: and the FROM: email addresses, so the only thing you need is somone who has your address in their address book and all the other folk's addresses in their address book and the virus will mix n match. think of the address book like a hat full of email addresses. the virus randomly draws an email from the hat and puts that in the To: field, then draws another email from the hat and makes that the From: field. make sense?
kimberly: about the popups - do what stephen advices. i recently got cable internet and started getting all those popups as well, and shutting off that messenger service completely eliminated them. i can't believe windows still leaves that on by default!
brent's advice about spyware removal programs is a Good Idea for all users, just like everyone should have the best virus protection money can buy. if more users did those relatively simple tasks worms and spyware would not be nearly the issue they are today. actually, they would probably be just that much more cleverly designed, but whatever - its still a good idea.
re: email programs - i telnet onto my server using putty in secure mode, so i am actually viewing my email in a text-based unix environment, instead of windows. they make about as many worms for unix as they do for macs (ie none). i occasionally use eudora to download backups of my email onto my local harddrive, but i don't use the addressbook at all.
and btw, hugh, at risk of displaying some gross ignorance on my part, i have never heard of a single virus that can attack your system just because you view the email. you have to actually click on the attachment to try and open it or run it in order to release the virus. i think this is universally correct (lucas? stephen? others?). i am only talking about an email-transmitted virus here, of course - a virus could copy itself through the network, etc, but reading or not reading your email won't affect that.
practice safe computing...
brian